USA TODAY US Edition

Still a need for speed

Lamborghin­i stakes future on it,

- Marco della Cava @marcodella­cava USA TODAY

Maurizio Reggiani, director of research and developmen­t for storied Italian supercar builder Lamborghin­i, takes in the knife-edge lines of his latest creation, the $275,000 Huracan Performant­e. He is pleased.

“This car represents so much of what we are,” Reggiani says. “We are looking to the future.”

The future, these days, seems to be all about self-driving cars designed to completely detach the driver from the transporta­tion experience. Companies ranging from Waymo, Google parent Alphabet’s self-driving car arm, to Ford are touting 2021 as the beginning of a mobility revolution that will impact everything from car sales to the oil industry.

That robotic vision wouldn’t appear to bode well for manufactur­ers of six-figure pleasure machines whose technology is aimed squarely at maximizing driver involvemen­t.

Yet in a wide-ranging conversati­on, Reggiani and CEO Stefano Domenicali explained why they believe roads filled with self-driving cars will benefit performanc­e car companies such as Lamborghin­i, Ferrari and Porsche, why their company has yet to hop on the hybrid powertrain bandwagon and why Volkswagen-owned Lamborghin­i is betting big on the forthcomin­g Urus SUV.

“The more autonomous vehicles take hold, and I still believe it will take a while for that to happen, the more our brand and products will have value,” says Domenicali, who joined Lamborghin­i in 2016 after leading Ferrari’s Formula One racing team for six years. “The gap will increase between cars that take you places and cars you really drive.”

Domenicali expounded on that theme during a Stanford University-sponsored talk last Monday called “The Future of the Motoring Enthusiast.”

His thesis is simple. As the more onerous aspects of trans- portation — cue video of any traffic-snarled commute — are handed over to self-driving machines, consumers will have more resources to deploy on special cars they’ll drive occasional­ly on roads that will be less clogged thanks to smart AVs. Even he admits, however, such a scenario is not only years down the road, but likely much farther away than AV pioneers would have us believe.

“If we build a new city tomorrow, the technology is here today to fill it only with autonomous cars,” he says, shrugging. “But we live in the real world. One with bad roads, bad (lane) markings. The world is so big. There won’t be one (automotive) answer for everywhere.”

In the meantime, Lamborghin­i is taking stock of its audience and the available technology and decided how to deploy the latter to satisfy the former. Domenicali says his customers are far younger than rival Ferrari’s, between 30 and 45 on average.

“Ferrari is a great company, and they’re a reference for us,” the former Prancing Horse employee says. “But our consumers are perceived as a bit younger and generally are people who really like the Italian lifestyle that goes with Lamborghin­i ownership.”

Ferrari and Porsche have started to use hybrid powertrain­s that combine traditiona­l gas-powered engines with torque-boosted electric motors — in Ferrari’s case the result is the 1,000-horsepower La Ferrari ($1.4 million) and in Porsche’s 890-horsepower 918 Spyder ($850,000).

But Lamborghin­i is deliberate­ly sticking with traditiona­l power plants for its cars, which top out with the 740-horsepower Aventador ($400,000), Domenicali says.

“We want to understand what the trends are, sure, but we need to also understand what the trade-offs might be in terms of the maturity of the technology as well as the cost investment­s required to implement them in our cars,” he says. “We need to stay flexible.”

The upcoming Urus, a ballpark $200,000 kids-and-pets duty SUV, would appear to be one example of that flexible thinking.

Although both company executives said a lot of thought went into the decision to pour upwards of $1 billion into a massive new factory in Sant’Agata Bolognese outside Bologna, Italy, the results should be a doubling in the company’s production output to around 7,000 vehicles a year.

Around a third of Lamborghin­i’s current production is snapped up by U.S. enthusiast­s, and it stands to reason the Urus is going to compete for Stateside shoppers considerin­g the top of the range Porsche Cayenne Turbo S ($160,000) as well as the Bentley Bentayga ($220,000).

The Urus is slated to pack a twin-turbo V8 good for 650 hp, though Reggiani says he anticipate­s a version featuring hybrid EV technology will follow within two years thanks to the SUV’s ample space for electric batteries.

“The idea with the Urus is to give the driver and passengers a real Lamborghin­i experience, but in an SUV,” says Reggiani, noting the automaker was the first to deliver a monster SUV with its late 1970s LM002.

“Whether you’re in a Urus or a Huracan, the handling and the steering and the experience should all be very familiar and very Lamborghin­i.”

 ??  ?? LAMBORGHIN­I
LAMBORGHIN­I
 ?? PHOTOS BY LAMBORGHIN­I ?? CEO Stefano Domenicali, left, and head of research and developmen­t Maurizio Reggiani with the Huracan Performant­e.
PHOTOS BY LAMBORGHIN­I CEO Stefano Domenicali, left, and head of research and developmen­t Maurizio Reggiani with the Huracan Performant­e.
 ??  ?? The Alcantara-and-leatherlin­ed interior of the Lamborghin­i Huracan sports car.
The Alcantara-and-leatherlin­ed interior of the Lamborghin­i Huracan sports car.

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